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‘Dictator’ Duterte again defends Marcos burial at heroes’ cemetery

A FEW days after referring to himself as a “dictator” out of necessity, President Rodrigo R. Duterte has again defended his decision allowing the burial of late autocrat Ferdinand E. Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani, saying it was not about repaying a debt of gratitude to one of the latter’s daughters, Ilocos Norte Governor Maria Imelda Josefa “Imee” R. Marcos.

Mr. Duterte, however, acknowledged, that Ms. Marcos was his “lone supporter” in Luzon during the 2016 presidential campaign.

“I ha(d) no money, no supporters. In Manila, not even a single kagawad (had supported me). Who supported me in Luzon? No (one). Only Imee Marcos,” Mr. Duterte said during his speech at the Manila Times’ 7th Business Forum held in Davao City on Feb. 9.

“Then you will say that I allowed the burial of Marcos because his family had helped me? Look, stupid,” he added.

A couple of months after his election, Mr. Duterte issued a memorandum order allowing Mr. Marcos’s burial at the heroes’ cemetery, a promise that he made to supporters of the late dictator during the presidential campaign.

The President said: “The law says who will be buried there in the Libingan ng mga Bayani. Who are the heroes? The soldiers, the president. You must be the president at one time or a soldier. On both counts, Marcos was a president, you cannot deny that. And ’yung sabi nila na he was a bogus soldier. Well, sabi niya, tama, it’s fake.”

“If your opinion is different from mine, my news is fake, yours is right. That’s what we (will) quarrel about. You are fake. Why? Because you do not jive with what I believe in,” Mr. Duterte said.

Earlier in the week, during his speech before 215 former Maoist rebels at Malacañang on Feb. 7, Mr. Duterte said: “If you say dictator, I will be a dictator. Because if I will not be a dictator, nothing will happen to this country.”

The President also said on Saturday that Mr. Marcos’s loyal supporters, mainly coming from or has roots in his home province Ilocos Norte, deserve to have their “hero” interred at the Libingan ng mga Bayani.

“Itong mga ’to mga (These critics, they’re in) denial. Look. They are ready to deny Marcos his honor. You know, if the Ilocanos would believe that Marcos was really their hero, let them have their hero, too,” Mr. Duterte said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Women’s group slams ‘macho-fascist’ Duterte

GABRIELA Women’s Party on Sunday, Feb. 11, called President Rodrigo R. Duterte “the most dangerous macho-fascist in the government right now” following his speech last Wednesday, Feb. 7, wherein he narrated an exchange in which he tells government troops to shoot female members of the New People’s Army (NPA) “in the vagina.” Gabriela Representative Emmi A. de Jesus said in a statement. “He has further presented himself as the epitome of misogyny and fascism terribly rolled in one.” Speaking to an audience of former members of the communist NPA in Malacañang, Mr. Duterte said: “They will say ‘Okay, how many people are dead?’ ‘Three.’ ‘What?’ ‘Three.’ ‘Son of a b****, don’t lose.’ ‘Are there any women holding guns?’ ‘Sir, she’s a fighter. An amazona.’ ‘Shoot the….’” The statement earned laughter from the audience. Ms. De Jesus said such a statement from the country’s leader encourages the military “to commit more bloody human rights violations and grave abuses of international humanitarian law, and takes state terrorism against women and the people to a whole new level.” She added, ”They should expect more women to speak up and reject this style of macho-fascist leadership. We cannot just take these vile remarks sitting down.” — Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz

Tropical depression Basyang moves in

A TROPICAL depression, to be named Basyang, was expected to enter the Philippine area Sunday night, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) reported yesterday. As of Sunday morning, the weather disturbance was still 1,200 kilometers (km) east of Mindanao with sustained winds of 55 km per hour and moving at a west-northwest direction. “Maritime operations along the eastern seaboards of Visayas and of Mindanao may be disrupted once Tropical Cyclone Warning Signal is raised tonight (Sunday),” PAGASA said in its bulletin. Basyang’s forecast positions are: 550 km east of Hinatuan, Surigao del Sur by Monday morning, in the vicinity of Butuan City by Tuesday, and 185 km southeast of Puerto Princesa City, Palawan by Wednesday morning.

MIWD P41 water rate hike proposal still under review

METRO ILOILO Water District’s (MIWD) rate increase application of P41 for every 10 cubic meters (cu. m.), filed in August 2017, is still being reviewed by the Local Water Utilities Administration (LWUA) while a public consultation is set to be held this month. The rate increase, if approved, would translate to a monthly P200 average bill for households consuming 10 cu.m., up 26% from the current P159. LWUA Administrator Jeci A. Lapus, who was in Iloilo City last week for the Philippine Association of Water Districts’ 39th annual convention, said evaluation is ongoing and that “everything is being processed slowly but surely.” MIWD spokesperson Olive Ledesma said the last time the water distributor sought a rate increase was in 2004. “We need to cope with the inflation rate as well as our operating expenses,” she said, noting that MIWD currently has the lowest rate in Panay Island. MIWD covers Iloilo City and parts of Iloilo province. — Louine Hope Conserva

Honestbee now delivering in Cebu

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FOOD AND groceries delivery service provider honestbee is now in the cities of Cebu and Mandaue, and the Singapore-based company is planning to expand to other parts of Cebu province. Honestbee Philippine Country Head Crystal Gonzalez said the traffic congestion and the growing population in the Metro Cebu area prompted them to open operations. “Traffic is a stressful thing. Traffic here is quite massive,” she said during last Friday’s media launch. “Currently we only deliver to Cebu City and Mandaue City, but we are keen to expand operations to Pardo, Tabunok, Talisay and Mactan,” said Ms. Gonzalez, adding that they eventually want to cover the entire island province. Honestbee has partnered with more than 50 merchants in Cebu, including Robinsons Supermarket, Robinsons Selections, Ministop, Seaworld, JN’s Best, Visayan Educational and Office Supplies, Echostore, Life Med, the public markets in Carbon and Tabo-an, Ilaputi, Handuraw Pizza, Casa DOST, Kusina ni Nasing, and SnR, among others. — The Freeman

UPLB to start mobilization for Panabo school

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CONSTRUCTION OF the University of the Philippines Professional School for Agriculture and the Environment (UP PSAE) at the Agriya complex in Panabo City is targeted to start this year alongside preparations for manpower recruitment. “In terms of the actual physical construction, I think hopefully by the end of this year or early next year it will be started. They’re ready to go and they want to begin the project as well,” said Ricardo F. Lagdameo, vice-president of Damosa Land, Inc. (DLI), which owns the 88-hectare mixed-use Agriya complex. The UP PSAE, under the wing of UP Los Baños (UPLB), is intended to strengthen the agriculture sector as well as help UP Mindanao, located in Davao City, and other state universities and colleges in Davao Region through the development of research and academic programs. “I think starting this year, they’re going to bring in already their staff members or the ones in charge because they have to start the application process and recruiting people,” Mr. Lagdameo said in an interview last week. DLI is donating the area for the UP PSAE campus. UP PSAE is already offering graduate programs such as MS in Plant Pathology through an off-campus scheme with classes held at the Anflocor complex in Davao City. Other planned programs are MS and PhD in Environmental Science. As for Agriya, which was launched last year, Mr. Lagdameo said: “There’s a lot of movement already on the site since it was launched last year. We already cleared the initial areas and works on land development is ongoing.” — Maya M. Padillo

2 major drug dealers in Davao Region nabbed

TWO DRUG dealers, considered among the top two major suppliers in Davao Region, were nabbed last week in separate buy-bust operations. The regional office of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) identified the two as Florante G. Flores, who was arrested in Malita, Davao Occidental, and Saidel Taha Said in Maco, Compostela Valley. PDEA Region 11 Spokesperson Nephi Noli D. Dimaandal said the capture of the two is expected to result in more arrests as he urged other drug dealers to surrender to authorities. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

More firearms surrendered by Sulu local officials, residents

TWENTY MORE high-powered firearms and other weapons were surrendered Friday by local officials and residents to the Joint Task Force Sulu. ”This was a result of the relentless efforts of our forces in the campaign against loose firearms to pave the way for peace and progress in the province of Sulu,” Brigadier General E. Sobejana, JTF Sulu commander, said in a statement. On Feb. 2, Pata Island Mayor Anton Burahan and some barangay officials voluntarily surrendered a cache of weapons and ammunition following a combat operation against bandits launched by the Philippine Fleet-Marine Ready Force Sulu. That operation led to the discovery of an arms cache in Barangay Pisak Pisak on Pata Island. “As we sustain our momentum, we encourage all those who have a stake in the future of Sulu to take steps against terrorism and support our campaign to remove all tools and implements for violent extremism,” said Lt. Gen. Carlito G. Galvez, Jr., commander of the Western Mindanao Command. Mr. Galvez added, “We are intensifying our intelligence and combat operations to monitor and gather loose firearms… including that of soldiers and policemen.” — Albert F. Arcilla

5 Lanao del Sur coastal towns seen to benefit from ‘rido’ settlement

THE FIVE coastal towns of Lanao del Sur — Balabagan, Kapatagan, Malabang, Marugong, and Picong — are expected to reap economic benefits from the recent “rido” settlement involving six clans. “Ending these feuds in Mindanao will breed not only harmony but development in strife-torn areas,” Lt. Gen. Carlito G. Galvez, Jr., commander of the Western Mindanao Command (WesMinCom), said in a statement. Rido is a type of localized conflict among families and involves violent revenge acts. Last week, a rido settlement brokered by the Lanao del Sur provincial government and WesMinCom was signed among the Dimatingkal, Manalocon, and Cadayon families of Barangay Tiongcop, Malabang who have been in conflict with the Oting, Bacaraman, and Pandato families of Barangay Diragun, Marogong. Following the settlement, the military based in Lanao del Sur, together with the Ranao-Ragat Inter-Agency Task Force, received seven powered firearms from the previously warring clans. “In the long run, these settlements will bring the cessation of hostilities in Mindanao because they will empower communities to converge for peace and economic stability. This is why we are encouraging warring clans to take a decisive step through reconciliation and capitulation of firearms,” Mr. Galvez said. — Albert F. Arcilla

Nation at a Glance – (02/12/18)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.

Pro-health is pro-poor: Assessing TRAIN’s tax on sweetened beverages

We are currently living amidst the implementation of RA 10963, also known as Package One of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN). Among the TRAIN’s host of new and reformed taxes, of special note are the new excise taxes on sweetened beverages (SBs). Section 29 of RA 10963 levies a P6/L tax on drinks using caloric or noncaloric sweeteners, and a P12/L tax on drinks using high-fructose corn syrup.

Advocates of the tax, especially from the medical community, welcome it as a pro-health measure that advances better nutrition by reducing excessive sugar consumption. Critics of the tax, on the other hand, claim it is anti-poor, since (a) sweetened beverages form a significant portion of the poor’s caloric consumption, and (b) the national health crisis is one of chronic undernutrition rather than obesity.

Faced with these two positions, how does one begin to enter the debate?

Here, we review the arguments of both sides to set the record straight. When it comes to taxation — or really any policy measure — it is counterproductive and misleading to view issues in terms of simple dichotomies.

SUGAR: GOOD OR BAD?
The first point of contention revolves around the simple valuation of sugar as either good or bad.

Health advocates emphasize how sweetened beverages raise blood sugar and blood pressure levels, increase body weight and risk for dental problems, and eventually cause resistance to insulin, which is our natural way of controlling sugar levels in our bodies. In this light, raising taxes to reduce consumption sounds sensible. Meanwhile, for critics, sweetened beverages are considered the poor’s ready access to calories that will fulfill their daily requirements. The SB tax is thus framed as a regressive measure, depriving the poor of an important source of daily nourishment.

It seems to me that to finish the debate here is tantamount to shrugging one’s shoulders and saying the poor can be left to consume the empty (even harmful) calories because it’s all they have. But how do we move forward together as a nation, if we find ourselves caught between starvation and junk?

The answer is less surprising than one might think.

On one hand, the current SB tax provision already exempts the beverages most consumed by the poor, including all milk and coffee products. But more to the point: instead of simply reducing the consumption of harmful products, the government can use the funds from the SB tax to make healthier alternatives like vegetables and potable water more accessible and affordable, especially for the poor.

Since nutrition is already part of the blanket earmarks for incremental funds from TRAIN, the best course of action seems to be for the government to walk their talk in the coming months. To change deeply ingrained behaviors on a societal level takes not only the elimination of some options, but also the improvement of others, of better options.

OBESITY OR UNDERNUTRITION?
The second point of contention is that we have much smaller an obesity problem (about 6% prevalence) than an undernutrition problem. Mexico, in contrast, had an obesity prevalence of about 30% when it imposed its own sweetened beverage tax. Perhaps in this case such a measure is justified.

As I argued in a previous article, however, even if undernutrition is indeed more prevalent than obesity in the Philippines, the two nonetheless coexist in our country, with the rates of both rapidly on the rise. This has been referred to as our double burden of malnutrition.

Furthermore, in this article, it is worth reiterating that our health issues aren’t limited to issues of weight.

Increased sugar consumption has been linked to three of the top killers in our country, all of them tied to lifestyle habits instead of communicable infection: cardiovascular disease, cancer, and diabetes. In a country where health expenditures are primarily out-of-pocket, often plunging families into poverty and cycles of debt, the claim that we do not have a problem yet simply does not hold water.

Let us not hold the present hostage at the future’s expense. The urgency of one issue does not cancel out the urgency of the other.

PRO-HEALTH OR ANTI-POOR?
To this end, perhaps the key point to emphasize is that one does not solve a complex problem with a single solution: for effective reform for health and nutrition, the SB tax must be complemented by effective utilization of incremental revenues to build an entire ecosystem conducive to health and nutrition.

The notion of Pigovian taxes offers us guidance here. A Pigovian tax recognizes that individual consumption of goods may affect the broader society. This social cost is called a negative externality. The tax corrects the externality by having consumers pay for the social cost, thus reducing consumption. Furthermore, the revenue generated by the tax is ideally spent on lowering the costs of other goods or providing services that correct existing market failures. The SB tax draws on the central logic of Pigovian taxes, seeing implementation in countries all around the world.

How do we answer the question posed by advocates and critics then? Is the SB tax pro-health or anti-poor?

At this point in time, perhaps our best answer is that it is neither quite yet. But on the horizon approaches new legislation that might allow us to take a definitive stance, one that sees the tax as overwhelmingly pro-poor by being pro-health.

In September last year, the House of Representatives passed HB 5784, the Universal Healthcare (UHC) Bill, which proposes a whole-of-government, whole-of-system, and whole-of-society approach to health. It guarantees automatic “access to a comprehensive set of health services . . . which will not cause financial hardship.” All inpatient and outpatient health services will become available at zero co-payment, thus eliminating the risk of catastrophic debt poor families often experience when a family member falls ill.

In other words, by funding UHC through the SB revenues, the government will be financing health and nutrition precisely through measures that directly improve health and nutrition. Health care thus becomes truly universal by not just building sustainable safety nets that protect the poor through health coverage, but also through preventive measures that encourage healthy lifestyles even before the onset of illness.

In this way, perhaps there need not be a dichotomy at all. Done right, the SB tax might allow us to choose both health and the welfare of the poor at the same time.

 

Joshua Uyheng is a researcher for Action for Economic Reforms.

Soft power: Our defense in the Chinese century

Back in 2010, Goldman Sachs predicted that China’s economy will surpass that of the United States by the year 2030. It could happen sooner if the US fails to get its financial house in order. By the year 2050, China is seen to have an economy 40% larger than that of the US with nominal GDP of $58 trillion. America will trail behind with its $34 trillion economy.

We live in a time in history when a shift of world powers is taking place. The next 15 years will usher in the dawn of the Chinese epoch where our neighbor to the north will have the loudest voice in world trade, global policy, and geopolitical influence. This will have a profound effect on the Philippines given the many paradigm shifts we will have to contend with.

First among these shifts is that the new superpower will be one that operates according to strong Confucianism values. These are values we Filipinos are hard-pressed to understand considering our predominantly western orientation.

Secondly, we will be coexisting with a superpower that views itself as not as a nation state but a “civilization state.” As such, it act like a empire and for all intents and purposes, is governed like one. It has aggressive expansionist ambitions with the military and financial resources to back it up. This “kingdom” state of mind is nothing new. It is deeply entrenched in the Chinese psyche, one that goes as far back as the Qin dynasty.

Third, unlike former superpowers like the US and UK who embrace diversity on the back of their multi-racial societies, ninety percent of Chinese identify as belonging to the Han race. In Chinese society, cultural purity is embraced while diversity is frowned upon. This explains their aversion towards inter-racial marriages as the Hans view themselves as superior to others.

Finally, the Chinese generally look at its government as a morale authority. To their majority, the state is infallible as it is seen as the guardian of their civilization. Citizens rarely challenge the state, unlike western democracies who question their governments at every turn. This leaves the Chinese government with virtually no moral check and balance from within.

These paradigm shifts make China a dangerous superpower, especially for the Philippines whose territories and resources are within China’s expansion path.

MULTIPLE POLARITY OF POWER
Thankfully, China will not be the lone superpower of the future, according to former American assistant secretary of Defense, Joseph Nye. The US and the European Union will still maintain collective dominance on the military front. It will also maintain its influence on public opinion given its iron clad grasp of the communication superhighway through mass media and the internet. Economically, the US, India, Brazil, and Russia will balance the financial might of China.

Hence, the world of tomorrow will have a multiple polarity of power with China as the predominant figure. In many ways, it will be akin to the world order of the 18th and 19th century when the UK was the dominant force, but mitigated by France, Germany and Italy.

The dynamics of power will be different with China in the forefront as compared to how it is today.

Whereas in the 20th century, America dictated how the world was governed through the establishment of the United Nations, with a polarity of power, no single organization or country will have the final say on global policy or rule of law. Global governance will be largely dictated by agreements and treaties between nations. We are seeing it already with treaties like the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the World Trade Organization.

Thus, we will see alliances shift depending on the interests of nations. The Philippines must attract and collect enough allies to battle China’s creeping invasion.

SOFT POWER TO NAVIGATE THE ‘MIDDLE LEVEL TRAP’
Pricewatehause Coopers and Goldman Sachs both see the Philippines rising to become the 19th largest global economy by 2050 with GDP of $3.3 trillion. In financial respects, this is welcome news. However, this puts us in a dangerous place known as the “middle level trap.” The middle level trap is that awkward place where an economy is too small to dictate global policy but large enough to be affected by every accord signed by the more powerful nations. The Philippines must gain a louder voice in the world stage.

The ability to influence policy and global decisions is where true power lies. Traditionally, power was gained by amassing military power and/or economic strength. But in this age of hyper-connectivity, a new source of power has arisen — its called “Soft Power.”

Soft Power refers to a nation’s ability to attract coalitions, followers, cohorts, and cliques not by force or money but by persuasion. It is the ability to shape the preferences of others through appeal and attraction, says Nye.

It is not a far fetched idea.

Just think how we Filipinos despised and feared Russia in the height of the cold war. We Filipinos identified with America and viewed the situation through their point of view. This is soft power at work.

As a nation in the middle level trap, the Philippines must attract followers towards policies that work to its best interest. After all, policies that are pushed by many are those that are most likely to be enacted. This is especially important for us as China pushes forward with its agenda of territory expansion at our expense .

How does a nation gain soft power?

Two ways, the first is a given — by putting into place a well-oiled diplomatic machine. The second is to aggressively promote a nation’s culture so as to let the world identify with it and embrace it as its own.

Developed countries have been working on their soft power since the end of world war one. France has created Alliance Francaise for this purpose as did the UK with its British Council, Germany with its Geoethe Institut and Spain with Instituto Cervantes. A few developing countries in Asia have recently been on a cultural assault of their own. India has been doing it through the promotion of Bollywood, Yoga, and Ayurveda while South Korea has been successful with K-Pop.

In the Philippines, the National Commission for Culture and Arts (NCCA) is the main agency tasked to preserve and promote Philippine culture. The fact that Congress has granted the NCCA a token budget of P30 million reflects how our legislators view cultural development and promotion. They don’t think much of it. The time has come for government to revisit our cultural program.

The Philippines must plant the seeds today to gain its gravitas for tomorrow. Amassing soft power must be part of our arsenal given our military and financial limitations to face China. The good news is that we are not bereft of cultural facets to sell to the world. Our performing arts, visual arts, cuisine, and folklore are compelling enough to have people appreciate what it is to be Filipino. Done right, we can influence the world to embrace the Filipino way of life and help us defend it.

 

Andrew J. Masigan is an economist.